Gate has released something new: CrossEx - touted as a "one-stop trading and settlement platform".
At first, I didn't pay much attention, after all, I've heard slogans like "Unified API", "Cross-exchange matching", and "Multi-location deployment" too many times over the years. But after carefully looking at the architecture and the range of support, I found that this thing is different; it is truly solving the "structural problems of trading efficiency."
We have always said that trading should be fast, liquidity should be deep, and strategies should be precise. But the reality is:
To deploy the strategy, you need to open three exchange accounts and manage risk yourself; The matching logic is different, and the API documentation has its own set, even the transaction responses are inconsistent; When arbitraging across exchanges, the movement of funds is not only expensive but also slow; Let alone that the fee levels need to be differentiated and the unified settlement is almost unsolvable.
To put it simply, these problems are not due to "technical issues," but rather because the "trading infrastructure has not yet been connected." The interesting thing about the CrossEx that Gate is promoting this time is:
🔹 Unified Account System: One account connects three exchanges (Gate/OKX/Binance), eliminating the hassle of opening multiple accounts.
🔹 Unified API + Interface Alignment: Truly achieve writing a strategy template that can run directly on different exchanges with extremely low deployment costs.
🔹 Cross-institution margin sharing: A USDT full warehouse pool, with three schools of mutual profit and loss offsetting, the efficiency of fund usage is not 10%, but multiple times.
🔹 Unified Risk Control & Settlement Mechanism: Bringing strategy backtesting, live monitoring, abnormal termination, and settlement all onto one platform, the full lifecycle closed loop of quantitative trading is finally taking shape.
I think this is not Gate "launching a new trading tool", but more like it is trying to build a "central layer for quantitative infrastructure". It is not about competing with Binance / OKX for C-end users, but rather about seizing the "operating system entry for professional users." Whoever can grasp the underlying needs of strategy developers, quantitative traders, and institutional fund managers will be able to stand firm in the future infrastructure track of high-frequency trading and intelligent strategies. In simple terms, previously centralized exchanges competed on "the number of coins" and "the depth available," but now they are focused on "whether efficiency can be closed-looped" and "whether the operational link can be connected."
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Gate has released something new: CrossEx - touted as a "one-stop trading and settlement platform".
At first, I didn't pay much attention, after all, I've heard slogans like "Unified API", "Cross-exchange matching", and "Multi-location deployment" too many times over the years.
But after carefully looking at the architecture and the range of support, I found that this thing is different; it is truly solving the "structural problems of trading efficiency."
We have always said that trading should be fast, liquidity should be deep, and strategies should be precise. But the reality is:
To deploy the strategy, you need to open three exchange accounts and manage risk yourself;
The matching logic is different, and the API documentation has its own set, even the transaction responses are inconsistent;
When arbitraging across exchanges, the movement of funds is not only expensive but also slow;
Let alone that the fee levels need to be differentiated and the unified settlement is almost unsolvable.
To put it simply, these problems are not due to "technical issues," but rather because the "trading infrastructure has not yet been connected."
The interesting thing about the CrossEx that Gate is promoting this time is:
🔹 Unified Account System:
One account connects three exchanges (Gate/OKX/Binance), eliminating the hassle of opening multiple accounts.
🔹 Unified API + Interface Alignment:
Truly achieve writing a strategy template that can run directly on different exchanges with extremely low deployment costs.
🔹 Cross-institution margin sharing:
A USDT full warehouse pool, with three schools of mutual profit and loss offsetting, the efficiency of fund usage is not 10%, but multiple times.
🔹 Unified Risk Control & Settlement Mechanism:
Bringing strategy backtesting, live monitoring, abnormal termination, and settlement all onto one platform, the full lifecycle closed loop of quantitative trading is finally taking shape.
I think this is not Gate "launching a new trading tool", but more like it is trying to build a "central layer for quantitative infrastructure".
It is not about competing with Binance / OKX for C-end users, but rather about seizing the "operating system entry for professional users."
Whoever can grasp the underlying needs of strategy developers, quantitative traders, and institutional fund managers will be able to stand firm in the future infrastructure track of high-frequency trading and intelligent strategies.
In simple terms, previously centralized exchanges competed on "the number of coins" and "the depth available," but now they are focused on "whether efficiency can be closed-looped" and "whether the operational link can be connected."